Copy-paste prompts for the creator grind — ideas that don't run dry, outlines that write themselves, blog drafts, YouTube scripts, scroll-stopping hooks, and turning one piece into ten. Built to keep your voice, not flatten it. Works with ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini. No signup — just tap Copy.
The blank page is the enemy of every creator — but "write me a blog post about X" hands you a soulless first draft you'll rewrite anyway. The prompts below work differently: they pull ideas from your experience, force the model to react to a real audience, and keep your voice intact through drafting and editing. Swap the [brackets] for your niche and topic, and you'll ship faster without sounding like a robot.
Never stare at an empty content calendar again.
Best for: a month of content from a single topic.
I create content about [niche] for [audience]. Generate 30 content ideas spun from this one pillar topic: [pillar topic]. Organize them into 5 buckets: how-to/educational, contrarian or myth-busting, personal story/behind-the-scenes, quick tips/listicles, and question/discussion starters. For each idea give a working title and the one specific takeaway a viewer would get. Then flag the 6 most likely to earn saves and shares, and note which 2 could become a lead magnet or paid product.
Best for: standing out in a crowded niche.
My topic is [topic] in the [niche] space. Almost everyone covers it the same obvious way. Give me 8 fresh angles that are underused: contrarian takes, overlooked sub-audiences, "what nobody tells you", myth vs reality, a step people skip, and framing it through a different lens (beginner, expert, business owner, hobbyist). For each angle, write the hook line and say who it would resonate with most. Rank by originality and shareability.
Best for: turning a topic into a ready-to-draft structure.
Create a detailed content outline for a piece titled "[title]" aimed at [audience]. Give me: an opening hook that names the reader's problem, 4-6 main sections each with a one-line purpose and 2-3 bullet points to cover, a spot to insert a personal example or case study, and a closing that ends on a memorable takeaway plus a soft call-to-action. Keep the flow logical so I can draft top to bottom without reorganizing. Note where a visual, screenshot or example would land best.
This page is a taster. 30 AI Prompts for Content Creators covers ideation, scripting, blogging, newsletters, repurposing and editing — each with fill-in-the-blank variables and usage notes so you never rebuild a prompt from scratch. One download, yours forever.
Get the Content Creator Pack — $5 → Instant download · 100% money-back guarantee · Or get all 68 in the Ultimate Vault ($7)First drafts that keep your voice.
Best for: turning rough thoughts into a real post.
Turn my messy notes below into a first-draft blog post for [audience]. Keep MY points, opinions and examples — don't add generic filler or invent facts I didn't give you. Structure it with a hook, clear sections with subheadings, and a strong close. Write in a [conversational / direct / warm] voice, short paragraphs, no corporate hedging ("it's important to note", "in today's fast-paced world"). Where a point is thin, mark it with [EXPAND] instead of padding it.
MY NOTES:
[paste your rough notes / bullet points]
Best for: a weekly email your subscribers actually open.
Write a newsletter issue for [audience] on the topic: [topic]. Structure: a curiosity-driven subject line (plus one alt to test), a personal 2-3 sentence opening that earns the read, the main value section built around one idea they can act on this week, a short "one thing worth your time" recommendation, and a warm sign-off with a single question to spark replies. Keep it skimmable and human — like a smart friend emailing me, not a brand broadcasting. Around 400-600 words.
Best for: making a dry subject actually engaging.
Help me tell [topic] as a story instead of a lecture. Give me 4 story frames I could use: a personal before/after, a mistake-I-made-so-you-don't, a case study of someone who got a result, and a "day in the life" scenario. For each frame, write the opening 3 sentences and outline the arc (setup → tension → resolution → lesson). Recommend which frame fits my audience [audience] best and why. Keep it concrete — real stakes, not abstract advice.
Best for: captions that stop the scroll and drive comments.
Write 3 caption options for a post about [topic] for [platform]. Each needs: a first line that works as a standalone hook (curiosity, bold claim, or relatable pain — under 12 words), 2-4 short value lines with real substance, and a soft CTA that invites a comment or save (not "link in bio" spam). Vary the three: one story-led, one list/tips, one contrarian opinion. No emojis unless I ask, no hashtag walls — suggest 4-5 relevant tags separately.
30 AI Prompts for Content Creators: ideation, blog and newsletter drafting, YouTube scripts, hooks, repurposing and self-editing — organized with variables so you never face a blank prompt. Or grab the Ultimate Vault for all 68 across writing, marketing, business and research.
Get the Content Creator Pack — $5 → Instant download · Money-back guarantee · Everything in one place → Ultimate Vault ($7, code JULY25 = 25% off)Titles, hooks and scripts for YouTube, Shorts & TikTok.
Best for: the title/thumbnail combo that wins the impression.
Generate 10 YouTube title options for a video about [video topic] aimed at [audience]. Mix the styles: curiosity gap, specific number/result, "how to X without Y", contrarian, and transformation. Keep each under 60 characters and avoid clickbait you can't pay off. For the top 3 titles, also suggest a matching thumbnail concept (the 3-4 words of text + the visual idea). Then tell me which title+thumbnail pair you'd test first and why.
Best for: stopping viewers from clicking away instantly.
Write 6 opening hooks (the first 15 seconds of spoken script) for a video about [topic]. Each must do one job: make the viewer feel they'll lose something by leaving. Vary the approach: bold promise, surprising fact or number, a mistake most people make, a question they can't answer, a "by the end of this video you'll..." payoff preview, and a mini open-loop. Keep them tight and spoken-word natural — no throat-clearing "hey guys welcome back". Mark which one you'd open with.
Best for: a 30-60s script that holds attention start to finish.
Write a 45-second short-form video script about [topic] for [audience]. Structure: a hook in the first line (0-3s), a fast-paced value body delivering 1 clear idea with a concrete example, and a final line that either loops back to the hook or drives a comment/follow. Format it as spoken lines with rough timestamps and on-screen text cues in [brackets]. Keep the language punchy and conversational — written for the ear, not the page. No filler.
Best for: structuring a 8-15 minute YouTube video.
Outline a [length]-minute YouTube video on [topic] for [audience]. Give me: a cold-open hook, a quick "here's what you'll get" promise, 4-6 main segments each with a mini-hook to re-earn attention, a spot for a story or example in the middle to reset engagement, and a strong close with a clear next-step CTA. For each segment note the one key point and where a b-roll, demo or graphic would help retention. Keep the pacing tight — flag anything that could sag.
Squeeze ten pieces out of one.
Best for: getting maximum mileage from a single upload.
Take the video below (transcript or key points) and repurpose it into a week of content: 3 short-form video ideas with hooks, 2 social posts (one story-led, one tips), 1 email newsletter angle, 1 carousel outline, and 3 quote/stat graphics. For each, pull the real insight from the source — don't water it down or invent new claims. Keep each piece platform-native and standalone. Flag the single strongest clip or quote to lead with. VIDEO CONTENT: [paste transcript or bullet points]
Best for: turning long-form writing into a feed.
Repurpose the article below into 8 standalone social posts. Give me: 2 short "hot take" posts, 2 how-to/carousel outlines, 2 story-format posts, 1 stat/quote caption, and 1 question post to drive comments. Keep each platform-native and skimmable — no "check out my blog" filler. Preserve the article's real insight in each; don't dilute the good parts. Note which post is most likely to go wide. ARTICLE: [paste the article or its key points]
Tighten it, sharpen it, and make it sound like you.
Best for: making generated or stiff copy sound human.
Rewrite the text below so it reads like a sharp human wrote it, not an AI. Cut hedging and filler ("in order to", "it's important to note", "in today's world"), vary sentence length, use concrete nouns and active voice, and delete any sentence that doesn't add information. Keep my meaning and key points exactly — don't add new claims. Match this voice: [describe — e.g. direct, dry-witted, warm]. Return only the rewrite.
TEXT:
[paste the copy]
Best for: getting AI drafts that actually sound like you.
Below are 2-3 samples of my own writing. Analyze my voice and give me a reusable "voice guide": my typical sentence length and rhythm, tone, vocabulary quirks, how I open and close, what I avoid, and 5 signature phrasings. Then write one fresh paragraph on [new topic] in that exact voice so I can check the match. Keep the guide tight enough to paste at the top of future prompts. MY WRITING SAMPLES: [paste 2-3 short samples]
Best for: the final tightening before you publish.
Act as a tough but fair editor. For the draft below, do three things: (1) flag the weakest opening line and rewrite it to hook harder, (2) mark any sentence that's vague, repetitive or padding and suggest a tighter version, and (3) check the ending actually lands a takeaway. Don't rewrite the whole thing — give me targeted edits with a one-line reason each, so I keep control. Be honest about what's boring. DRAFT: [paste your draft]
30 AI Prompts for Content Creators: ready-to-run prompts for ideas, blogs, newsletters, YouTube scripts, hooks, repurposing and self-editing — each with fill-in-the-blank variables so you never stare at a blank prompt again. Or grab the Ultimate Vault for all 68 across writing, marketing, business and research.
Get the Content Creator Pack — $5 → Instant download · Money-back guarantee · Everything in one place → Ultimate Vault ($7, code JULY25 = 25% off)The fear every creator has about AI is real: lean on it lazily and your channel starts to sound like everyone else's. The fix isn't avoiding the tools — it's prompting them so you stay in the driver's seat. Every prompt on this page is built to pull from your real experience, your examples and your opinions, then hand the mechanical work (structuring, tightening, repurposing) to the model. Use the "Teach the Model Your Voice" prompt once, save the output, and paste it at the top of everything else — your drafts will start sounding like you, not like a template.
Yes. None of these are ChatGPT-specific — they're plain-language creative instructions, so they work in ChatGPT (GPT-4o / GPT-4.1), Claude, Gemini, and any capable model. Paste your niche, topic and audience where the brackets are, and go.
The single biggest lever on quality is the input you provide. Paste your rough notes, a transcript of your last video, your actual writing samples. The more concrete the context, the less the model invents — and invented details are exactly where AI content loses trust with an audience. Feed it your truth and it hands back something you can proudly ship.
Most creators burn out chasing fresh ideas when their best work is already sitting in the archive. Before you script another video, run one you already published through the "One Video Into a Week of Content" prompt — you'll usually find a week of posts, clips and an email hiding inside a single upload. Distribution beats production almost every time.
These 16 cover the tasks creators hit every single week. If you'd rather not rebuild prompts each time — and want the same quality across ideas, drafting, video, repurposing and editing — the 30 AI Prompts for Content Creators pack has them organized with variables and notes, or the Ultimate AI Prompt Vault gives you all 68 across every discipline. Less than the price of lunch, and it pays for itself the first time it saves you an afternoon.
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